News Corporation

NasdaqGS:NWS Rapport sur les actions

Capitalisation boursière : US$15.0b

News Gestion

Gestion contrôle des critères 3/4

Le PDG News est Robert Thomson, nommé en Jan2013, a un mandat de 13.33 ans. La rémunération annuelle totale est $ 20.62M, composée du salaire de 14.5% et des bonus 85.5%, y compris les actions et options de la société. détient directement 0% des actions de la société, d'une valeur de $ 55.62K. La durée moyenne de mandat de l'équipe de direction et du conseil d'administration est respectivement 4.3 ans et 12.9 ans.

Informations clés

Robert Thomson

Directeur général

US$20.6m

Rémunération totale

Pourcentage du salaire du PDG14.55%
Durée du mandat du directeur général13.3yrs
Propriété du PDG0.0004%
Durée moyenne d'occupation des postes de direction4.3yrs
Durée moyenne du mandat des membres du conseil d'administration12.9yrs

Mises à jour récentes de la gestion

Recent updates

Seeking Alpha Sep 09

Wall Street Lunch: US Labor Market Sees Big Downward Revisions

Summary U.S. job growth was revised down by 911,000, signaling a weaker labor market and supporting expectations for a Fed rate cut next week. News Corp and Fox shares fell after secondary offerings resolved the Murdoch family dispute, with Lachlan Murdoch retaining control. Citi reiterated Buy ratings on major memory chipmakers, forecasting memory undersupply in 2026 due to AI-driven demand. Goldman Sachs highlights alternative asset managers, firms with high floating rate debt, and gold miners as top investment opportunities for late 2025. Read the full article on Seeking Alpha
Seeking Alpha Feb 06

News Corporation: Deserves An Upgrade On Improving Bottom Line

Summary News Corporation's Q2 2025 results exceeded expectations, with revenue rising 4.8% to $2.24 billion and earnings per share increasing to $0.40, driving stock gains. Key growth areas included the Dow Jones segment, Digital Real Estate Services, and Book Publishing, while the News Media segment saw a slight revenue decline. The sale of Foxtel Group to DAZN and partnerships with Microsoft and OpenAI highlight strategic moves to monetize assets and leverage content libraries. Improved financial metrics and strategic deals make NWS stock more attractive, justifying an upgrade to a soft "buy" despite the stock's recent rise. Read the full article on Seeking Alpha
Seeking Alpha Sep 26

News Corp: Near 52-Week Low Again Despite Solid FY22

Summary News Corp shares are again near their 52-week low and down 37% in the past year, with Class A shares trading at 12.5x FY22 EPS. Operational performance has continued to be solid, with Q4 providing a mostly strong finish to FY22, despite investor macro concerns. We continue to expect EBIT to grow at mid-to-high single-digits, led by high-quality assets in Dow Jones and Digital Real Estate Services. News Corp's 61% stake in REA is still worth 70% of its market capitalization, leaving a 20%+ Free Cash Flow Yield for the rest. We believe investors can expect a 20-30% upside, either by going long News Corp or a pair trade of long News Corp, short REA. Introduction We review our Buy rating on News Corp (NWSA) after shares are again near their 52-week low. We initiated our Buy rating on News Corp in early July. Since then Class A shares (which we preferred) are down 2%, taking them back to near their 52-week low and down 37% in the past year: News Corp Class A Share Price (Last 1 Year) Source: Google Finance (25-Sep-22). (News Corp has two classes of shares, Class A and Class B (NWS), with both having the same economic rights but only Class B having voting rights in most situations. We prefer Class A for being slightly cheaper.) We continue to believe News Corp shares to be an attractive investment, both in their own right and as a pair-trade opportunity against its listed subsidiary, REA Group Ltd. (OTCPK:RPGRY). Operational performance has continued to be solid, with Q4 providing a mostly strong finish to FY22. Shares are trading at a 12.5x P/E and a 1.3% Dividend Yield. The REA stake is still worth 70% of group market capitalization, leaving a 20%+ Free Cash Flow Yield for the rest. We expect a 20-30% upside from either holding NWSA shares or from a long News Corp/short REA trade. News Corp Buy Case Recap News Corp. is a NASDAQ-listed media conglomerate with interests in property listings, print and television. The company operates primarily in the U.S., Australia and the U.K., and reports in five main segments. News Corp Revenues & EBITDA by Segment (FY22) Source: News Corp company filings. At our initiation, we saw two ways in which we believe investors could generate a profit: Long News Corp, short REA – News Corp owns a 61.4% stake in listed Australian property listings company REA Group, and the value of this stake equalled to around 70% of News Corp’s market capitalization, which means the rest of News Corp appeared significantly undervalued with an implied Free Cash Flow Yield of nearly 20% Own News Corp shares outright – News Corp has a mixed portfolio of assets, but many are high-quality and we believe overall EPS can grow at mid-to-high single-digits over time. We also believe the P/E can potentially re-rate upwards by 20-30%, especially if management decides to tackle News Corp’s conglomerate discount Q4 FY22 results released on August 8 represented a strong finish to the year, supporting our investment case. News Corp Q4 FY22 Results News Corp finished FY22 with Total Revenues up 11.0%, Segment EBITDA up 31.1%, and Adjusted Net Income as well as Adjusted EPS up nearly 80% year-on-year, helped by a continuing rebound from COVID-19 as well and acquisitions, but offset by currency; Q4 FY22 saw Total Revenues grew 7.3% and Segment EBITDA up 50.0%: News Corp P&L Headlines (Q4 & Full-Year FY22 vs. Prior Periods) Source: News Corp results release (Q4 FY22). News Corp EBITDA has continued to rebound from the pandemic-related trough in FY20. Within the $396m increase in EBITDA in FY22, the largest contributor was the cyclical, ad-driven News Media segment ($165m), followed by Dow Jones ($101m) and Digital Real Estate Services ($60m); the other two segments had roughly flat EBITDA. News Corp EBITDA by Segment (FY15-22) Source: News Corp company filings. NB. FY ends 30 Jun. Figures include impact of currency and acquisitions/disposals. Just as importantly, News Corp’s solid growth has continued into Q4, despite investor concerns on global macro. News Corp Performance by Segment News Corp’s different segments represent a mixed portfolio of assets, with quality ranging from great to okay. At our initiation we predicted that overall EBIT can grow at mid-to-high single-digits annually on average, based on: Digital Real Estate Services – EBIT growth at 10%+ Dow Jones – EBIT growth at 10%+ News Media – EBIT growth at 4-6% Book Publishing – EBIT growth at 3-4% Subscription Video Services – EBIT decline of 2-3% Recent performance has been slightly stronger than we expected, helped by a continuing recovery from COVID-19. We review each segment’s recent performance in turn below. All segmental results are distorted by acquisitions (positive) and the strengthening dollar (negative), while some were also helped by an extra week in Q4 FY22. We have focused on EBITDA, not EBIT, because the former forms most of management reporting. “Adjusted growth” figures quoted below exclude the impact of currency and acquisition and are the most meaningful. Digital Real Estate Services Digital Real Estate Services finished FY22 with Adjusted growth of 17.1% in revenues and 16.3% in EBITDA, including local-currency growth of 25.0% in revenues and 19.3% in EBITDA for REA: Segment Revenues & EBIT – Digital Real Estate Services Source: News Corp & REA company filings. Q4 growth was weaker, with an adjusted growth of just 7.3% in revenues, and an adjusted decline of 1.4% in EBITDA, both affected by a $20m adjustment in the value of future trailing commissions at REA financial services. The segment has seen some signs of a cyclical slowdown in residential property markets, for example with the U.S. subsidiary Move seeing a 39% year-on-year decline in lead volumes and REA seeing Australian residential new buy listings rising just 2% year-on-year (compared to 54% in the prior year). The risk of a downturn in Australian and U.S. property markets have clearly risen for the near term. Over a longer timeframe, however, we still expect strong revenue and EBITDA growth to continue in this segment. Dow Jones Dow Jones finished FY22 with adjusted growth of 11.4% in revenues and 24.9% in EBITDA, helped by both structural growth in circulation and professional information revenues, as well as a cyclical rebound in advertising; reported growth was stronger than adjusted growth, helped by acquisitions of OPIS and Base Chemicals: Segment Revenues & EBIT – Dow Jones Source: News Corp company filings. Q4 adjusted growth was stronger than the full year by approximately 5 ppt, but largely due to an extra week this year that was worth $40m (9 ppt); Q4 reported growth was stronger than the full year due to acquisitions, with OPIS contributing a full quarter and Base Chemicals contributing a month. We expect strong circulation and professional information revenues to continue to drive Dow Jones EBITDA growth. News Media News Media finished FY22 with adjusted revenue growth of 11.7%. Reported revenue growth of 9.9% ($218m) was helped by both a rebound in Advertising (up $120m) and structural growth in Circulation & Subscription (up $83m); operational leverage in the segment meant that EBITDA rose 317% ($165m): Segment Revenues & EBIT – News Media Source: News Corp company filings. Q4 was driven by similar dynamics, with adjusted revenue growth of 14.1%, but helped $36m or approximately 6 ppt by an extra week this year. Reported revenue growth was 5.7% ($34m) after currency headwinds. EBITDA growth ($33m) was similar to reported revenue growth ($34m), despite $20m of incremental investment on Talk TV in the U.K. Q4 also saw Advertising revenues grow 8% year-on-year (after currency), “with strength in digital across all our key mastheads” and “driven by the strength of digital advertising”, which management “expect will soon be the largest source of the segment’s advertising revenues”. Growing circulation and subscription are likely to continue, driving steady EBITDA growth for the segment. Book Publishing Book Publishing finished FY22 with 3.4% of adjusted revenue growth but 5.9% of adjusted EBITDA decline, the discrepancy being the result of supply chain and inflationary pressures, which “continue to persist”. Reported growth was much higher than adjusted growth, largely due to the acquisition of Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Books & Media in May 2021. Segment Revenues & EBIT – Book Publishing Source: News Corp company filings. Q4 growth rates were similar to those of the full year, though management stated they “have seen increased orders ahead of the Rings of Power series on Amazon Prime” in September and expected the related publicity to “have a profound impact on HarperCollins’ performance”.
Seeking Alpha Sep 12

News goes ex-dividend tomorrow

News (NASDAQ:NWS) had declared $0.10/share semi-annual dividend, in line with previous. Payable Oct. 12; for shareholders of record Sept. 14; ex-div Sept. 13. See NWS Dividend Scorecard, Yield Chart, & Dividend Growth.
Seeking Alpha Aug 08

News GAAP EPS of $0.19 beats by $0.11, revenue of $2.67B beats by $90M

News press release (NASDAQ:NWS): Q4 GAAP EPS of $0.19 beats by $0.11. Revenue of $2.67B beats by $90M. Shares +1.8% AH.
Seeking Alpha Jul 06

News Corp: High-Quality Assets Suffering Conglomerate Discount

News Corp is a conglomerate with high-quality assets in property listings portals, professional information products and marquee newspapers. A stake in REA alone is worth 71% of its market capitalization, so the rest of the business is valued at a 19% Free Cash Flow Yield. News Corp has some high-quality businesses, while others are mostly at least stable; group EBIT should grow at mid-to-high single-digits. The current P/E is 15.7x. We believe this includes a conglomerate discount, and the stock deserves a blended P/E of 20x. Investors can gain a 20-30% upside from either a long News Corp / short REA pair trade, or by owning News Corp shares outright. Introduction We are initiating our coverage of News Corp (NWSA) with a Buy rating and an expectation of a 20-30% upside. News Corp. is a NASDAQ-listed media conglomerate with a market capitalization of $9.2bn. Shares have fallen more than 40% since their peak in March 2021, and are now at their lowest since November 2020: News Corp Class A Share Price (Last 5 Years) Source: Google Finance (05-Jul-22). (News Corp has two classes of shares, Class A and Class B (NWS), with both having the same economic rights but only Class B having voting rights in most situations. We prefer Class A for being slightly cheaper.) The best risk/reward is available from going long News Corp and short REA Group (RPGRY), a listed Australian company in which News Corp holds a 61.4% stake. The stake is worth $6.6bn, equivalent to 71% of News Corp’s current market capitalization, which means the rest of News Corp is too cheap at a double-digit Free Cash Flow Yield. Long-only investors can also profit by holding News Corp shares outright. News Corp has a number of high-quality assets and should be able to grow its EPS at mid-to-high single-digits over time. Shares are trading at a P/E of 15.7x, which we believe is 20-30% too low. Share buybacks should help generate a high-single-digit EPS growth and the Dividend Yield is 2.6%, generating a low-teens annualized return even if valuation changes do not materialize. Company Overview News Corp. is a media conglomerate with interests in property listings, print and television. The company operates primarily in the U.S., Australia and the U.K., and reports in five main segments: News Corp Revenues & EBITDA by Segment (FY21) Source: News Corp company filings. Digital Real Estate Services – property listings websites in Australia, the U.S. and parts of Southeast Asia Subscription Video Services – pay TV and video streaming in Australia, including the Foxtel Group Dow Jones – consumer publications and professional information products, including The Wall Street Journal Book Publishing – primarily the consumer publisher HarperCollins, with more than 120 branded imprints News Media – newspapers in Australia, the U.K. and the U.S., as well as a U.K. radio network business Advertising was as much as 27% of group revenues before COVID-19. Because of this, as well as currency and acquisitions/disposals, News Corp’s EBITDA can be volatile, though it has been rebounding strong since FY21: News Corp EBITDA by Segment (Since FY15) Source: News Corp company filings. NB. FY ends 30 Jun. Figures include impact of currency and acquisitions/disposals. Many of News Corp’s segments are in entirely separate sectors and have little synergies with each other. This has likely created a conglomerate discount in its valuation and also a pair trade opportunity. Long News Corp, Short REA The pair trade opportunity is to go long News Corp and short REA. The main asset in the Digital Real Estate Services segment is a 61.4% stake in listed Australian property listings company REA Group. REA currently has a market capitalization of $10.7bn, larger than that of News Corp, and the implied value of the stake is equivalent to 71% of News Corp’s current market capitalization: Valuation – News Corp vs. REA Source: Company filings. Excluding REA’s implied value and contribution, News Corp has a market capitalization of just $2.6bn and a Last-Twelve-Month (“LTM”) (ending March 31, 2022) Free Cash Flow (“FCF”) of $500m, which implies a FCF Yield of 19%: FCF & FCF Yield – News Corp vs. REA Source: Company filings. NB. Figures are LTM as of 31-Mar-22. This “News Corp ex. REA” FCF Yield is far too high and should eventually shrink. If the FCF Yield were to shrink by 50% to 9.4%, then the value of “News Corp ex. REA” even if FCF remains unchanged. Investors can benefit from this by going long News Corp and short REA. The actual ratio to be used depends on subjective judgment, but each News Corp share owns 0.1385 REA shares indirectly, which implies a dollar ratio of 100:71. We look at an example where we buy $100 of News Corp and sell short $71 of REA below: Example Long News Corp / Short REA Trade Source: Librarian Capital estimates. In this example, suppose REA’s share price were to fall by 30% while the theoretical value of the non-REA part of News Corp were to increase by 50%. These should translate into a 7% decline in the theoretical value of each News Corp share, which means we would lose $7 on the long side but gain $21 on the short side, resulting in a net profit of $14 from the trade. This would represent an upside of 49% from the original $29 net exposure. Upside of 20-30% can be achieved with smaller changes in the “News Corp ex. REA” FCF Yield. Owning News Corp Shares Outright Long-only investors can also profit by holding News Corp shares outright News Corp has a mix of assets, some of which are high-quality while others are more mediocre. We believe overall EBIT can grow at mid-to-high single-digits annually on average, based on: Digital Real Estate Services – EBIT growth at 10%+ Subscription Video Services – EBIT decline of 2-3% Dow Jones – EBIT growth at 10%+ Book Publishing – EBIT growth at 3-4% News Media – EBIT growth at 4-6% Our assumptions are based on each segment’s track record, outlined below. Digital Real Estate Services Segment Digital Real Estate Services is a strong business capable of growing EBITDA at 10%+ annually in our view. The segment’s main asset is a 61.4% stake in REA Group, a listed property listings company in Australia; it also owns an 80% stake in Move, a similar business in the U.S. that competes with Zillow. (REA owns the other 20% of Move, as well as stakes in certain property listing businesses in Southeast Asia.) The segment generates revenues from listings, advertising, referrals and related financial products such as mortgages. Segment revenues and EBITDA have been growing strongly, helped by acquisitions, though they did fall significantly in FY20 due to the impact of COVID-19 on listing and project volumes, currency as well as a transition to a referral model in the U.S.; REA-only revenues (in AUD) show a similar pattern: Segment Revenues & EBIT – Digital Real Estate Services Source: News Corp & REA company filings. We expect strong revenue and EBITDA growth to continue in this segment, though a downturn in the Australian property market may create some temporary negative headwinds. Subscription Video Services Segment Subscription Video Services is structurally challenged, but EBITDA declines are likely limited to 2-3% annually. The segment includes News Corp’s 65% stake in Foxtel Group (the other 35% is held by Telstra (TLSYY)) and the wholly-owned Australia News Channel. It is mostly a traditional pay TV business, more recently augmented several new streaming services. Revenues and EBITDA have been falling for several years, as the traditional pay TV subscriber base continues to shrink. The decline decelerated in FY19-21 but picked up again in FY22 year-to-date: Segment Revenues & EBIT – Subscription Video Services Source: News Corp company filings. We expect further subscriber and revenue declines, mitigated by continuing cost control, resulting in small EBITDA declines. Dow Jones Segment Dow Jones is a strong business capable of growing EBITDA at 10%+ annually in our view. The segment includes both consumer publications such as The Wall Street Journal and Barron’s and professional information products such as Dow Jones Risk & Compliance and Factiva. In 2022, the segment entered the commodities information market by acquiring OPIS for $1.15bn and Base Chemicals for $295m from S&P Global (SPGI). The segment has been growing its Circulation & Other and Professional Information Business revenues steadily, helped by acquisitions. Circulation revenue growth has been driven by an expanding subscriber base, with a 48% increase in total subscribers between Q4 FY19 and Q3 FY22. Advertising was 21% of segment revenues in FY21, having declined during the pandemic. EBITDA will likely have doubled from its FY18 level by the end of FY22: Segment Revenues & EBIT – Dow Jones Source: News Corp company filings. We expect strong growth in circulation and professional information revenues to continue to drive EBITDA growth. Book Publishing Segment Book Publishing is a mediocre business likely to see EBITDA growth limited to 3-4% annually in our view. The segment consists primarily of HarperCollins, the #2 consumer publisher globally. In FY21, it generated 96% of its revenues from consumers, and only 22% of these revenues are digital sales. Consumer print publishing faces poor secular demand trends and Amazon’s pricing power. EBITDA has been range-bound through FY18-20; FY21 was helped by a boost in demand from COVID lockdowns, hits including the Bridgerton series as well as two acquisitions; FY22 year-to-date saw EBITDA decline again, as rising costs more than offset slightly higher revenues: Segment Revenues & EBIT – Book Publishing Source: News Corp company filings. The segment is likely stable due to its scale advantage, with earnings growing slightly faster than inflation. News Media Segment News Media is a solid business capable of growing EBITDA at 4-6% annually in our view. The segment consists of newspapers in Australia (including The Australian), the U.K. (including The Sun and The Times) and the U.S. (primarily New York Post). Advertising was 59% of segment revenues in FY19, but had shrunk substantially in FY20-21 due to the disposal of News American Marketing (a newspaper ad and in-store coupon business) and COVID-19. These led to a collapse in EBITDA from $204m in FY18 to $52m in FY21: Segment Revenues & EBIT – News Media Source: News Corp company filings.
Seeking Alpha Apr 03

News Corporation: Attractive Upside Still Exists

News Corporation has fared well recently, both on its top line and on its bottom line. The company likely has a bright future, thanks in large part to attractive growth from some of its key assets. Shares also look attractively priced at this point in time, indicating that there still exists upside potential.
Seeking Alpha Nov 29

News Corporation: Shares Offer Some Upside

News Corporation has been on a bumpy ride in recent years due to both one-time and structural issues. The picture today is looking up and News Corp. looks fundamentally attractive. Though News Corp. shares are probably closer to being fairly valued relative to the competition, they are cheap on an absolute basis.
Seeking Alpha Aug 20

News Corporation: Valuation Disconnect Remains Despite Sensible And Opportunistic Dealmaking

News Corp. announced the pending acquisition of OPIS, an end-to-end pricing and analytics provider for the energy industry. I view the acquisition as a win from both valuation and strategic aspects. The ex-REA stub remains undervalued by the market.

Analyse de la rémunération des PDG

Comment la rémunération de Robert Thomson a-t-elle évolué par rapport aux bénéfices de News?
DateRémunération totaleSalaireBénéfices de l'entreprise
Mar 31 2026n/an/a

US$447m

Dec 31 2025n/an/a

US$439m

Sep 30 2025n/an/a

US$474m

Jun 30 2025US$21mUS$3m

US$480m

Mar 31 2025n/an/a

US$470m

Dec 31 2024n/an/a

US$431m

Sep 30 2024n/an/a

US$363m

Jun 30 2024US$20mUS$3m

US$269m

Mar 31 2024n/an/a

US$218m

Dec 31 2023n/an/a

US$226m

Sep 30 2023n/an/a

US$133m

Jun 30 2023US$19mUS$3m

US$163m

Mar 31 2023n/an/a

US$267m

Dec 31 2022n/an/a

US$299m

Sep 30 2022n/an/a

US$467m

Jun 30 2022US$20mUS$3m

US$623m

Mar 31 2022n/an/a

US$499m

Dec 31 2021n/an/a

US$496m

Sep 30 2021n/an/a

US$492m

Jun 30 2021US$23mUS$3m

US$330m

Mar 31 2021n/an/a

-US$53m

Dec 31 2020n/an/a

-US$862m

Sep 30 2020n/an/a

-US$1b

Jun 30 2020US$14mUS$3m

-US$1b

Mar 31 2020n/an/a

-US$923m

Dec 31 2019n/an/a

-US$183m

Sep 30 2019n/an/a

-US$173m

Jun 30 2019US$15mUS$3m

US$155m

Rémunération vs marché: La rémunération totale de Robert ($USD 20.62M ) est supérieure à la moyenne des entreprises de taille similaire sur le marché US ($USD 14.84M ).

Rémunération et revenus: La rémunération de Robert a été cohérente avec les performances de l'entreprise au cours de l'année écoulée.


PDG

Robert Thomson (64 yo)

13.3yrs
Titularisation
US$20,623,729
Compensation

Mr. Robert J. Thomson has been the Chief Executive Officer of News Corporation since January 2013. He served as Editor-in-Chief of Dow Jones & Company, Inc and Managing Editor of The Wall Street Journal fr...


Équipe de direction

NomPositionTitularisationCompensationPropriété
Robert Thomson
CEO & Director13.3yrsUS$20.62m0.00037%
$ 55.6k
Lavanya Chandrashekar
Chief Financial Officer1.3yrsUS$6.15m0.0011%
$ 166.9k
David Pitofsky
Executive VP & General Counsel11.3yrsUS$6.22m0.015%
$ 2.3m
Ruth Allen
Executive VP & Chief Human Resources Officer4.3yrsUS$2.96mpas de données
Marygrace DeGrazio
Chief Accounting Officer3.8yrspas de données0.0064%
$ 963.6k
Julian Delany
Executive VP & Chief Technology Officerless than a yearpas de donnéespas de données
Michael Florin
Senior VP & Head of Investor Relations13.1yrspas de donnéespas de données
Arthur Bochner
Executive VP & Chief Communications Officerno datapas de donnéespas de données
Anoushka Healy
Executive VP & Chief Strategy Officerno datapas de donnéespas de données
Michael Bunder
Senior VPno datapas de donnéespas de données
James Marcovitz
Senior VP & Deputy General Counselno datapas de donnéespas de données
Todd Thorpe
Executive VP & Global Head of Government Affairs4.3yrspas de donnéespas de données
4.3yrs
Durée moyenne de l'emploi
52.5yo
Âge moyen

Gestion expérimentée: L'équipe de direction de NWS est considérée comme expérimentée (ancienneté moyenne 4.3 ans).


Membres du conseil d'administration

NomPositionTitularisationCompensationPropriété
Robert Thomson
CEO & Director12.9yrsUS$20.62m0.00037%
$ 55.6k
Masroor Siddiqui
Independent Lead Director12.9yrsUS$413.28kpas de données
Lachlan Murdoch
Chairman of the Board12.9yrsUS$1.02m0.00029%
$ 43.6k
Keith Murdoch
Chairman Emeritus2.5yrsUS$4.89m0.13%
$ 19.9m
Michael Miller
Executive Chair of News Corp Australasia10.5yrspas de donnéespas de données
José Aznar
Independent Director12.9yrsUS$341.57k0.00020%
$ 30.1k
Natalie Bancroft
Independent Director12.9yrsUS$324.07k0.00039%
$ 58.6k
Ana Pessoa
Independent Director12.9yrsUS$329.07kpas de données
Sarah Wood
Chairman of Unruly8.1yrspas de donnéespas de données
12.9yrs
Durée moyenne de l'emploi
56yo
Âge moyen

Conseil d'administration expérimenté: Le conseil d'administration de la NWS est chevronné et expérimenté ( 12.9 années d'ancienneté moyenne).


Analyse de l'entreprise et données financières

DonnéesDernière mise à jour (heure UTC)
Analyse de l'entreprise2026/05/22 08:44
Cours de l'action en fin de journée2026/05/22 00:00
Les revenus2026/03/31
Revenus annuels2025/06/30

Sources de données

Les données utilisées dans notre analyse de l'entreprise proviennent de S&P Global Market Intelligence LLC. Les données suivantes sont utilisées dans notre modèle d'analyse pour générer ce rapport. Les données sont normalisées, ce qui peut entraîner un délai avant que la source ne soit disponible.

PaquetDonnéesCadre temporelExemple de source américaine *
Finances de l'entreprise10 ans
  • Compte de résultat
  • Tableau des flux de trésorerie
  • Bilan
Estimations consensuelles des analystes+3 ans
  • Prévisions financières
  • Objectifs de prix des analystes
Prix du marché30 ans
  • Cours des actions
  • Dividendes, scissions et actions
Propriété10 ans
  • Actionnaires principaux
  • Délits d'initiés
Gestion10 ans
  • L'équipe dirigeante
  • Conseil d'administration
Principaux développements10 ans
  • Annonces de l'entreprise

* Exemple pour les titres américains ; pour les titres non américains, des formulaires réglementaires et des sources équivalentes sont utilisés.

Sauf indication contraire, toutes les données financières sont basées sur une période annuelle mais mises à jour trimestriellement. C'est ce qu'on appelle les données des douze derniers mois (TTM) ou des douze derniers mois (LTM). En savoir plus.

Modèle d'analyse et flocon de neige

Les détails du modèle d’analyse utilisé pour générer ce rapport sont disponibles sur notre page Github; nous proposons également des guides expliquant comment utiliser nos rapports et des tutoriels sur Youtube.

Découvrez l'équipe de classe mondiale qui a conçu et construit le modèle d'analyse Simply Wall St.

Indicateurs de l'industrie et du secteur

Nos indicateurs de secteur et de section sont calculés toutes les 6 heures par Simply Wall St. Les détails de notre processus sont disponibles sur Github.

Sources des analystes

News Corporation est couverte par 24 analystes. 12 de ces analystes ont soumis les estimations de revenus ou de bénéfices utilisées comme données d'entrée dans notre rapport. Les soumissions des analystes sont mises à jour tout au long de la journée.

AnalysteInstitution
April LowisBarrenjoey Markets Pty Limited
Eric ChoiBarrenjoey Markets Pty Limited
Aryan NoroziBarrenjoey Markets Pty Limited